ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 8月21日 23時10分
Roya Rahmani, the first woman to be Afghanistan’s ambassador to the United States, remembers all too well what her country was like under the Taliban’s rule in the 1990s. Women were beaten for leaving their homes and barred from attending school or holding jobs. “People were drained of hope,” she said. Today, women make up 28% of the Afghan National Assembly — more than in the U.S. Congress. But as the U.S. and the Taliban move toward a preliminary peace agreement, which could be released in days, there are growing concerns that the gains Afghan women have made over nearly 2 decades will be lost under future Afghan governments. Visit the link in our bio to read more. @lexey took this photo.
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gisacarloman
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charlieperkins14
I want our troops out of Afghanistan as soon as possible. However, as soon as we leave the Taliban may return women to their previous abject subjugation. Are we negotiating our departure despite women’s certain and incalculable cost? In other words, women’s incalculable cost.
floffalo
Like Antifa in the USA stacking innocent people with different political and religious ideas.
liebowitzcarrie
Wecome madame ambassador. Please disgregard any statements made by our president.
goody327
Thank GOD for Trump or we could be in that position at some point soon.🇺🇸🇺🇸
dustywhite2
They can thank Trump for this. What a piece of crap he is.
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